it was leather, and ad straps type in Google roman footwear and you will see pictures of dull shoes. They are not like our kind of shoes they were very horriable. :)
Magnum footwear is certainly competitive amongst their competition for good, quality footwear. Their niche market is in their boots like Tony Lama and the like.
Juvenile footwear sales slowed in the early 1990s
Dutch clogs have been worn for hundreds of years, with the earliest known clog-like footwear dating back to the Roman times. The wooden clogs we associate with the Netherlands were likely introduced in the 16th century as practical and durable footwear for farmers and laborers.
No, born footwear is not a good shoe to help you with running. Born footwear are like boots and casual shoes. You should wear light weight running shoes to assist you.
Dolce Vita sells their footwear line at many of the higher end retailers. You can purchase Dolce Vita footwear at stores like Macy's, Bloomingdale's, and Nordstrom's.
Actualy, I am goofy footed(right foot in front) and I'm right handed and I where fallen footwear. So the answer is....there really are some people like me who are goofy footed and wear fallen footwear.
The "caligae" worn by Roman soldiers were open-sided hobnailed leather footwear.
A high-heeled boot.
Zappos is a retailer of Romika footwear. Romika as well as most other footwear brands may also be found at sites such as Amazon, eBay, and other retailers like Nordstrom.
Several places online offer tactical footwear that are expensive and cheap. Online stores like Amazon.com or Tactical.com are great places to start for what you are looking for.
The Romans would normally wear a shoe for outdoor footwear. This could be a leather sole, with optional small wooden bars or nails on the underside, and either a bootie type arrangement tied at the ankle or a strappy type with the straps very close together and the toe covered. These styles protected the feet from any oozy stuff in the Roman streets. Do not be misled by Hollywood's Roman wardrobe. The Romans only wore sandals and slippers indoors never outside.
Because if you don't wear the right footwear, you could get a disease or virus/sickness, like wearing flip-flops on a day you thought was going to be hot...